Everyday Practices of Interdependence
Language: English
Simultaneous Translation: No
Inhabitation, care, and everyday practices as central drivers of spatial transformation. From the revival of existing housing through attentive modes of living, to river-based urban imaginaries shaped by ecological and cultural legacies, to narratives of forced mobility due to gentrification, gendered labor, and the reclaiming of public space, the contributions reveal how space is continually produced through use, maintenance, and social relations. Together, they frame interdependence as something enacted daily, through care work, informal practices, and collective appropriation, rather than imposed through fixed architectural solutions.
Selected Contributions Projects
Selected Contributions ListNow That the Neighborhood Is Nice, Why Do I Have to Move?
Authors: CO53 (Sharona Cramer & Yotam Oron).
Speaker: Sharona Cramer.
Reviving local games, Reclaiming Public Spaces: Let’s Play Initiative Nepal.
Authors: Rojita Sharma and Sadichchha Shrestha.
Speaker: Sadichchha Shrestha.
Spatial Interdependence: Hollowed Villages Becoming Sustainable Communities.
Authors: Huinan Zhang, Shiyu Wei and Jun Shan.
Speaker: Huinan Zhang.